Chicago Portage National Historic Site

In 1673, Indian guides showed French explorers Louis Joliet and Jacques Marquette a short land route, or portage, that connected the Great Lakes with the Mississippi River System, revealing one of the key water routes across the continent and ultimately establishing Chicago as a major trade center. A memorial to that
important discovery, the Chicago Portage National Historic Site,
established in 1952, preserves that vital link as part of the I & M
Canal National Heritage Corridor.

Marquette and Joliet paddled their canoes up the Illinois and Des Plaines Rivers to Portage Creek, where they carried their goods and canoes about a mile and a half to the Chicago River and continued to Lake Michigan. Joliet immediately envisioned a canal connecting the two waterways to bypass the portage.

It wasn't until 1848 that the Illinois and Michigan Canal was completed, linking the Chicago River at Bridgeport to the Illinois River at La Salle. Despite competition from railroads, the canal was a successful commercial route and helped spur the growth of Fort Dearborn into the metropolis that Chicago is today.

The Forest Preserve District of Cook County is developing the site. At present, a marker and 20-foot statue commemorate Marquette and Joliet and their Indian guides. Visitors can follow the portage trail used by the explorers along a sandy ridge in Ottawa Trail Woods to the site of Laughton's Trading Post, where Indians and traders bartered their goods.

Kids stand in awe of ancient creatures in the Great Hall of Dinosaurs and participate in hands-on activities at the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History. Find out about family vacations at the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History.

On a hilltop overlooking Cincinnati stands the large Greek revival-style house where President William Howard Taft was born in 1857. The house is restored to look as it did when he lived here. Check out the William Howard Taft National Historic Site.